Illustration

Filipe Jardim. Picture Block. You have used various interesting printing processes, from Risograph to rubber stamps – what's your favourite and why?

I don’t think I really have a favourite printing process and every project has to find its printing process. Stamps, for example allow you to compose unique and very different images from the same shape repertoire. I used them for Tamponville, by isolating precise graphical elements from existing buildings, generic materials (girders, concrete structure, bricks, boards) or elements that give a notion of architectural period, I obtain an alphabet of shapes, a sort of typology of the town. These shapes, when separated one from the other, can seem almost abstract and it’s only when they are assembled that you can identify a building. What interests me in this process of assembling with stamps, is that it looks like the way a town can be constructed, where different periods, materials and types of use accumulate and are superimposed on top of each other.

This one's about the art of designing your team kit.Illustration2015 Cover illustration for Professional Engineering Magazine, exploring the pros and cons of fracking.Illustration2015 I realised the other day that I have been skateboarding for 26 years!
Illustration2015 a little news illustration for Waitrose magazine about a new service buy 'Bistro @ the station'. You can text your food order whilst on the train so it is ready for you when you arrive at the station.Illustration2015 Large Male Chicken, or Moody Rooster? Notice the deliberately crude printing, no trapping, misalignment etc. But I always think thats half the point of hand printing as I like the interesting textures this produces. Personal project, 'Sometimes its good to Lie'Illustration2011. María Hergueta. David Plunkert. Paul Grabowski - Illustration &amp; Graphic Design.

In 1980 they started a studio to do information design in a new and creative way which they called Grundy & Northedge Hugh Aldersey-Williams writing in Graphis in 1995 said of them; The humble basic communication of information has never had the glamour of other areas of design. The creation of a poster casts the designer as an artist. Bringing into being corporate identity for some giant multinational company showcase the designer as a business strategist. Peter Grundy and Tilly Northedge worked together for twenty-five years.

Toilet Economy. Gerd Arntz Web Archive. Benvinguts : alademosca il·lustració. Mission Control - Always With Honor. Always With Honor is the collective work of Tyler & Elsa Lang. Their mission is to create work that reflects their curiosity and pursuit of clarity.

Client List Audubon Boke Bowl Bon Appetit Businessweek Cascadia Ciderworkers United Chronicle Books Esquire Facebook Fortune GOOD GQ Harper Collins Kiplinger Metropolis Microsoft Money Monocle MTV New York Times Nike Ogilvy & Mather Path Real Simple TED The Atlantic The Manual Threadless Toyota UBS VSA Wired Xbox AWH Press Room A roundup of frequently asked questions. What is your logo? Our logo is the planet Jupiter, with its all seeing, all knowing eye watching over us. Where did you go to school, how did you meet and what did you do before AWH? We met in college at Ringling College of Art & Design. How did you get into the field of information/icon design? We both love icon design and illustration so we would incorporate them into our work as much as possible. What is your process, do you always work together or individually?